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The Roasting Marshmallows Program with IGRINS on Gemini South I: Composition and Climate of the Ultra Hot Jupiter WASP-18 b

Authors :
Brogi, Matteo
Emeka-Okafor, Vanessa
Line, Michael R.
Gandhi, Siddharth
Pino, Lorenzo
Kempton, Eliza M. -R.
Rauscher, Emily
Parmentier, Vivien
Bean, Jacob L.
Mace, Gregory N.
Cowan, Nicolas B.
Shkolnik, Evgenya
Wardenier, Joost P.
Mansfield, Megan
Welbanks, Luis
Smith, Peter
Fortney, Jonathan J.
Birkby, Jayne L.
Zalesky, Joseph A.
Dang, Lisa
Patience, Jennifer
Désert, Jean-Michel
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We present high-resolution dayside thermal emission observations of the exoplanet WASP-18b using IGRINS on Gemini South. We remove stellar and telluric signatures using standard algorithms, and we extract the planet signal via cross correlation with model spectra. We detect the atmosphere of WASP-18b at a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of 5.9 using a full chemistry model, measure H2O (SNR=3.3), CO (SNR=4.0), and OH (SNR=4.8) individually, and confirm previous claims of a thermal inversion layer. The three species are confidently detected (>4$\sigma$) with a Bayesian inference framework, which we also use to retrieve abundance, temperature, and velocity information. For this ultra-hot Jupiter (UHJ), thermal dissociation processes likely play an important role. Retrieving abundances constant with altitude and allowing the temperature-pressure profile to freely adjust results in a moderately super-stellar carbon to oxygen ratio (C/O=0.75^{+0.14}_{-0.17}) and metallicity ([M/H]=1.03^{+0.65}_{-1.01}). Accounting for undetectable oxygen produced by thermal dissociation leads to C/O=0.45^{+0.08}_{-0.10} and [M/H]=1.17^{+0.66}_{-1.01}. A retrieval that assumes radiative-convective-thermochemical-equilibrium and naturally accounts for thermal dissociation constrains C/O<0.34 (2$\sigma$) and [M/H]=0.48^{+0.33}_{-0.29}, in line with the chemistry of the parent star. Looking at the velocity information, we see a tantalising signature of different Doppler shifts at the level of a few km/s for different molecules, which might probe dynamics as a function of altitude and location on the planet disk. Our results demonstrate that ground-based, high-resolution spectroscopy at infrared wavelengths can provide meaningful constraints on the compositions and climate of highly irradiated planets. This work also elucidates potential pitfalls with commonly employed retrieval assumptions when applied to UHJ spectra.<br />Comment: 27 pages, 18 figures, submitted to AAS Journals. Community feedback welcome

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2209.15548
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/acaf5c